Art
Sucks
The BIG one.
By that I mean a penis.(*EDIT* : Read what I actually typed before making a comment, there has been much too much reviewing and repetition and I am slowly losing the will to live, thanks. In this post I mention fractal generators, I am by no means trying to discriminate against people who use them (I have!) or any of the other subjects I mention. It is the modern definition of art which I want to attack, NOT DIGITAL ART in and of itself. Both have their application and ups/downs. I support digital as much as traditional and now practise both).
Once upon a there was art. Art was great. Art was the best we had. Art was... the future!
Art was the emerging trends in architecture, fashion, and I dare say technology. Art captured the moment like nothing else could! There was no disposable digital endlessly replicable copy of a copy, there was blood sweat and tears, there was individual style, there was a discipline, a time-seasoned skill which just got better and better.
Then technology happened. Then the world became a bigger place. Then everyone knew about it. Then everyone had access to it. Famous artists can use presets, admirers acquire the same presets, and make the exact same product at breakneck speed. Look how NOT unique funky famous digital styles become once the artist distributes his presets, textures and brushes Photopshop or Painter. Fashion continues to fall back on itself, territory already exhausted. Art became a visual key to be abused, to sell, to hypnotize.
Art became weaponized.
Oooh cryptic!'Authorities' (Big world renowned galleries and publishers) on art tell us Tracy Emin is genius, Damien Hirst is a visionary. Other 'Visionaries' with digital tools, poster boys for big digital art software manufacturers, sponsors, money, technology, sensation, more money, more sensation, more technology, more sensation, more presets, more money......... blah.
This is art so they say?
Well... Art SUCKS!
I hope you don't mind my quoting you Guyo (I realize you were talking more about these digital toys like silk etc, but the spirit in which you say it is what struck me.)
Guyomech wrote:We are seeing more and more of this kind of thing- apps that produce a lot of visual pizazz with very little effort or need for traditional drawing skills. On the one hand, this empowers more people to become creative... But it also vastly alters the wheat/chaff ratio, if y'all follow me. A lot of visually impressive art without much depth- exactly what I think DeDao was hinting at. Hard to create a distinct style in this medium that stands out from everyone else's work.
Could not agree more. I understand these programs are supposed to be just for fun. Problem is, there is so much of this stuff filling up websites where people post 'art' to try and reach people... Only to be so hastily drowned by torrents of mandelbulb, apophysis and other fractal flames, weavesilk screengrabs, and UNGODLY amounts of manga, fan art, fantasy elves, cosplay.....
So then where does this leave an (EXTREMELY amateur) traditional 'artist' ?. Though I am myself such a n00b, I have been asked many times 'what program did you use?' , 'What type of airbrush do you recommend?' as if I MUST have used a tool to do most of the work. I have zero experience with either. I really do not want to cast myself as some sort of self righteous-traditional OLD DOG who refuses to evolve into the current most (insanely disproportionately more popular) medium, but it just seems as if traditional really is falling by the wayside. The only really famous traditional art these days seems to be super minimalist, craft-less irrelevant junk, such as a bunch of dots on a canvas, or the grossly inflated AMAZE-POW-ZAP-SPARKLY diamond encrusted skull... just BECAUSE. Because someone has too much money. Because it works. Because people won't shut up about it.
You may be thinking (hey, this is the DMT Nexus after all) 'Don't you know about Venosa? Dude, you should totally check out Alex Grey! He's a psychedelic traditional painter and he is super famous!'.
Sure. Ask the average bear who these people are. Watch as they search their brain for these names and come back with the answer/question: 'Who?'. Then ask them about Damien Hirst. 'Oh HIM... yeah didn't he saw a shark in half? Totally nuts man!'. Really. One is a skilled painter whom should be respected for his time and technique, dedication and vision. He is
BIG in
little psychedelic corners. (I'm using what I think is the BIGGEST example with Grey, the rest of them are far less known). The other saws a shark in half, paints dots, is a super world famous multimillionaire.
Forget trying my damnedest to materialize my imagination, I would gain much more appreciation for laying on my back, flipping my legs over my head and pissing in my own face. After all, in the traditional world, that's what ART is! As I gargle my own urine, please inject meaning and make me rich.
Art SUCKS then! I propose we call GOOD art 'craft'. Art is an inflated word. It's meaning is clearly subjective, unless we invoke a dictionary :
noun
1.
the quality, production, expression, or realm, according to aesthetic principles, of what is beautiful, appealing, or of more than ordinary significance.
Like a really good BLT! Because I say so!2.
the class of objects subject to aesthetic criteria; works of art collectively, as paintings, sculptures, or drawings: a museum of art; an art collection. See fine art, commercial art.
So art is anything usually recognized as art in the first place... ?3.
a field, genre, or category of art: Dance is an art.
So art isn't even one discipline but a vague term for anything... umm... 'arty?'4.
the fine arts collectively, often excluding architecture: art and architecture.
So everything recognized as art just IS...including sculpture, unless attached to a building where it floats straight over the ether of definition once again. 5.
any field using the skills or techniques of art: advertising art; industrial art
Almost everything we see in any modern society. It's always in your face.Not all that clear as to explaining why an unkempt bed complete with condoms and bodily secretions is revolutionary ART then (Tracy Emin!). Modern art seems to be all about notoriety, regardless of how little craft was used, so long as it inspires at least a bleat amongst the pretentious wine-sipping gallery 'hmm yes this scratch on the ceiling is BLOWING MY MIND' sheep. (I'll drink the wine and fake appreciation, PRO TIP: it's free! Sneaky git!)
I'd like to inspire debate but do not want to be torn a new one by those who support modern art, or prefer digital or traditional art.
1: Yes I understand ART is subjective, this is part of my point.
2: I understand the relevance of digital art in the industry and for leisure.
3: I understand how digital art empowers some to create more.
But ask yourself: 'Do I like this painting because of it's superb craftsmanship, or because it is bright and colorful?' Craft= craft, bright color alone and nothing else = ART.
I propose that good art is 1% art, 99% craft. It is craft that takes work, patience, countless failures, rejection, refinement, perseverance, skill... Craft is what makes makes work stand the test of time. Craft is not disposable and cannot be cloned, only learned by the individual, who by simple force of nature develops his or her unique nuances that make the 'art' YOURS.
*EDIT* TL;DR:
Digital art is not better than traditional and vice versa. Digital is more popular, and thus there is more naff digital art (less craft = more art) than traditional art on the internet, which is likely the biggest gallery in existence. In the traditional realm, the famous folks are letting the side down with minimal trite crap infused with false meaning, it makes a lot of money. Like so much cosplay, fan art, cartoons and random fractals and graphics (some of which may indeed be very good!) it seems to drown out the hard traditional stuff. Whilst there may be genre titans of either traditional or digital, the most vacuous and least crafted art is the most numerous and most famous. Craft (skill, technique, raw imagination and practiced execution) is what's up!
But ART...
Art is pissing in your own face. Art Van D'lay wrote:Smoalk. It. And. See.